sickness and accident in the Mission circle in the space
of five years was thirteen, ten being in the flush of
youth and prime of life, while three of them were chil-
dren. When to these is added the mortality among the
Indians and half-breeds, the impression might be that
the climate was deadly. Yet the climate of Oregon
has since been proven exceedingly salubrious ; and to
the causes of disease already enumerated, there seems
nothing more to add except the theory advanced by
some writers, that a disease when newly introduced
into a country is most virulent. 22
Meanwhile the superintendent is perfecting his plans for the foundation of a Methodist state. At the first annual meeting of the Methodist society in May 1841, a committee is appointed to select a loca- tion for the manual-labor school, which is chosen not far from the Mission mills, on the southern bor- der of the Chemeketa plain. Here a building costing ten thousand dollars is erected, in which an Indian school is kept for about nine months, beginning in the autumn of 1842, which comes to a close through the causes long tending in this direction. 23
The education of the children of the missionaries and settlers, now twenty in number, is a subject more pleasing to contemplate than the education of the natives. On the 17th of January, 1842, a meeting is held at the house of Jason Lee, who is now living at the new settlement, to prepare for the establishment of an educational institution for the benefit of white children, and a committee appointed to call a public meeting and prepare the way; the committee to con- sist of J. L. Babcock, Gustavus Hines, and David Leslie, the last named having returned from the Islands in April, by the fur company's vessel Llama, Captain Nye. The meeting is held on the 1st of February following, at the old mission house on
22 Darwin '« Voyaye round the World, 43-1-6.
28 Crawford '« Missionaries, MS., 4; Hints Or. and Institutions, 160.